US politics isn't broken. It's fixed | Katherine M. Gehl

67,003 views ・ 2021-04-20

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Everything I need to know about politics,
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I learned from cheese.
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For the last decade of my business career,
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I ran a 250-million-dollar food company in Wisconsin.
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And yes, we made cheese.
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If customers liked my cheese, I did well.
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If they didn't, they bought cheese from someone else and I did less well.
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That's healthy competition.
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Healthy competition incentivizes businesses to make better products.
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Better products equals happier customers
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and happier customers equals successful businesses.
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Win-win.
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Now, while I was running Gehl Foods,
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I was also deeply engaged in
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and increasingly frustrated by politics.
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The more frustrated I got,
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the more I wondered why competition in politics
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didn't deliver the same kind of win-win results.
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How did the Democrats and the Republicans keep doing so well
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when their customers, that's us, are so unhappy?
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Why is the politics industry win-lose?
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They win.
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We lose.
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The answer?
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It turns out that one thing almost all Americans agree on,
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"Washington is broken,"
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is also one thing we're all wrong about.
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Washington isn't broken,
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it's doing exactly what it's designed to do.
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It's just not designed to serve us, the citizens, the public interest.
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Most of the rules in politics are designed and continuously fine-tuned
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by and for the benefit of private gain-seeking organizations.
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That's the two parties, a textbook duopoly,
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and the surrounding companies in the business of politics.
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And they're all doing great.
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Even as the American public has never been more dissatisfied.
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Said another way, politics isn't broken, it's fixed.
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This is a guiding principle of politics industry theory,
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the nonpartisan body of work that I originated and have championed
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over the last seven years.
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Now, before I go further,
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I should tell you I'm not on the red team or the blue team.
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I call myself politically homeless, which may resonate with some of you.
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And my work doesn't focus blame on individual politicians
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on either side of the duopoly.
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The root cause of our political dysfunction,
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the cause that endures across all election cycles
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and all administrations
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is the system,
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the perverted rules of the game,
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the rules of the game in politics
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even make prisoners of our senators and representatives.
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Their only option is lockstep allegiance to their side of the divide.
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So what do we do about it?
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How do we free our Congress and make politics win-win?
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We change the rules.
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But which ones? It's not what we think.
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It's not gerrymandering, not the Electoral College,
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not the absence of term limits and not even money in politics, really.
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By looking at the system through a competition lens,
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politics industry theory identifies the two rules
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that are both our greatest obstacles and our greatest opportunities.
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They've been hiding in plain sight.
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Let's start with bad rule number one:
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party primaries.
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You all know primaries,
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those first round elections that we mostly ignore,
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the ones that identify the single Republican
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and the single Democrat who can appear on the November general election ballot.
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Party primaries have become low turnout elections
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dominated by highly ideological voters and special interests.
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Candidates know that the only way to make it
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to the general election ballot in November
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is to win the favor of these more extreme partisans in the primary.
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So candidates from both parties have little choice
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but to move towards those extremes.
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Why does this matter?
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Because it dramatically affects governing, and not in a good way.
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Imagine you're a member of Congress.
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You're deciding how to vote on a bipartisan bill
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that addresses a critical national challenge.
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You might ask yourself, is this a good idea?
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Is this what the majority of my constituents want?
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But that's not how it works in the politics industry.
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Instead, the question that matters most to you is,
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will I win my next party primary if I vote for this bill?
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The answer is almost always no.
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Consensus solutions don't win party primaries.
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Let's illustrate this key design flaw with a Venn diagram.
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In the current system, there's virtually no intersection,
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no connection between Congress acting in the public interest
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and the likelihood of their getting reelected.
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If America's elected representatives do their jobs the way we need them to,
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they're likely to lose those jobs.
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That is crazy.
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No wonder Congress doesn't get anything done.
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OK, now let's talk about bad rule number two:
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plurality voting,
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which I'll explain in just a moment.
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In any other industry as big and as thriving as politics
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with this much customer dissatisfaction and only two companies,
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some entrepreneur would see a phenomenal business opportunity
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and create a new competitor.
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But that doesn't happen in politics.
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Our current parties don't feel competitive pressure
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to serve the public interest,
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in large part because of one rule
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that keeps out almost all new competition:
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plurality voting.
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It sounds fancy, but it simply means the candidate with the most votes wins.
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That also seems logical, but it's a really bad idea.
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Why?
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Because in the United States you can win almost any election,
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even if a majority didn't vote for you.
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For example, in this three-way race,
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the winner only has 34 percent of the votes.
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Sixty-six percent of the voters, most people, wanted someone else.
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With plurality voting,
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we may not feel free to vote for the candidate we really want
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because we're afraid that we'll just waste our vote,
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or worse, will spoil the election.
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So if you think back to the 2016 presidential race,
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voters on the right who liked Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson,
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were told by the Republicans, "Don't vote for him! He's just a spoiler.
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He'll take votes away from Trump and help elect Hillary."
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And voters on the left who liked Green Party candidate Jill Stein
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were told by the Democrats, "Don't vote for her. She's just a spoiler.
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She'll take votes away from Hillary and help elect Trump."
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The spoiler problem that comes from plurality voting
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is the single biggest reason almost nobody new outside the duopoly
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ever runs or gets any traction
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because everyone knows they don't stand a chance.
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Politics is the only industry where we're regularly told
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that less competition is better.
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And if there's never any new competition,
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the existing parties aren't accountable to us for results
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because they don't need us to like what they're doing.
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They only need us to choose one of them as the lesser of two evils
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or to just stay home.
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The founders foresaw our situation and they warned us.
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As when John Adams said, "There is nothing which I dread so much
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as a division of the republic into two great parties,
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each arranged under its leader
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and concerting measures in opposition to each other."
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Now, there's nothing inherently wrong with parties
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or even having only two major parties.
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The problem is the current two are guaranteed to remain the only two,
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regardless of what they do or don't get done on behalf of the country.
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Does this sound like the best we can do?
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Of course not.
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So the founders gave us what they knew we'd need.
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They gave us this, our Constitution.
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There's a reason it's called the pocket Constitution: it's short.
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Guess what's not in here --
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instructions on how to run our elections.
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Crazy rules like party primaries and plurality voting, they're made up.
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But thanks to what is in here, Article I, they're optional.
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Article I gives every state the power
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to change the rules of election for Congress at any time.
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Personally, I think it now sounds like the perfect time.
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And here's where we turn nonpartisan politics industry theory into action.
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The political innovation we need is what I call final-five voting.
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With final-five voting,
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we make two simple changes to our elections for Congress.
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We get rid of what doesn't work,
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party primaries and plurality voting,
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and replace it with what will work:
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open top-five primaries
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and instant runoffs in the general election.
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Let me explain these changes with an example of final-five voting
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in a hypothetical and kind of cool election.
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So here we have eight candidates from four different political parties:
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Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, Abigail Adams,
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all the way through to Aaron Burr, ambitious as ever.
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Immediately you notice how diverse this field is.
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It's a primary people would want to vote in because it's exciting.
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It has experience and vision,
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but it's also young, scrappy and hungry.
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OK, maybe not so young.
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And because this is an open primary,
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all eight candidates are on the same ballot,
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regardless of party.
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When the results are in,
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the top five finishers move on to the November election,
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again, regardless of party.
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In the general election,
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voters pick their favorite, just like always.
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But then, if they would like,
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they can also rank their second, third,
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fourth and last choices.
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You may have heard of this idea as ranked-choice voting.
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Here's where things get interesting.
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If this election were a plurality vote like normal,
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Aaron Burr would win because he has the most first-place votes.
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Thirty percent.
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But because this is final-five voting,
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the winner will be the candidate who's most popular with the majority,
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not just with a narrow slice of voters.
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So we use instant runoffs.
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We drop the candidate who came in last
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and those who had marked that candidate as their first choice
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get their second choice counted instead.
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The process continues until a candidate emerges with a majority.
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It's just like a series of runoffs.
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But instead of having to keep coming back for another election,
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voters simply cast all their votes at once.
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And after those results are in,
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Alexander Hamilton wins with 68 percent of the vote.
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Final-five voting is the name
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for this combination of top-five primaries
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and instant runoff general elections.
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We must change both rules at the same time
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because it's how they work in combination
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that transforms the incentives in politics.
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The ultimate purpose of final-five voting is not necessarily to change who wins,
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it's to change what the winners are incentivized to do.
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Under this system, the message to Congress is
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“do your job or lose your job,”
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innovate, reach across the aisle whenever it's helpful,
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and come up with real solutions to our problems
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and create new opportunities for progress
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or be guaranteed new and healthy competition
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in the next election.
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Final-five voting gives voters more choice,
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more voice and most importantly, better results.
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I like to call it free-market politics
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because it will deliver the best of what healthy competition delivers
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in any industry:
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innovation, results and accountability.
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Now, before you think that I'm just making a naive overpromise
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of some crazy, unattainable utopia,
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I want to clarify that I'm not.
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I agree with Winston Churchill
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when he said,
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"Democracy is the worst form of government out there,
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except when compared to all the others."
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Democracy is messy and hard,
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and what we have now
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is messy, hard and bad results,
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really bad results.
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With final-five voting we'll have messy, hard and good results to show for it.
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And perhaps the most amazing part of all of this,
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final-five voting is powerful and achievable.
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We now have proof.
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In 2017,
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I published my early work on politics industry theory
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through Harvard Business School with my coauthor Michael Porter.
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The report made its way to Alaska where Scott Kendall read it,
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and then he took action.
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Scott used the work to design a ballot initiative,
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including these new rules.
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Just last month, November 2020,
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Alaska voters passed this initiative,
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and Alaska became the first state in the nation
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to choose healthy competition in elections for Congress.
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They won't be the last.
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It's devastating to really face
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how little we've come to expect from our politics.
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We think this is normal.
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We complain about it, but we've almost given up believing
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that it could ever be different.
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But this is no way to run the shining city on a hill
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that is America.
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We can choose different.
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Our Constitution gives us that power
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and, I believe, the responsibility
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to remake our politics when we need to --
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and we need to.
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With the greatest urgency and without fatigue,
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we must aggressively reclaim the enormous promise
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of the great American experiment,
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of our American politics,
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our politics.
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Not red politics. Not blue politics, ours.
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Thank you.
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